Logie Burn back to meandering ways

Published:15:14Monday 23 January 2012

Logie Burn, once a straightened watercourse through farmland, has been transformed back to its old, meandering ways to help wildlife thrive.

The Logie Burn in Scottish Natural Heritage’s (SNH’s) Muir of Dinnet national nature reserve (NNR) had been straightened to improve drainage at some time in the past. Straight burns tend to move sediment farther and faster, supporting fewer wild plants and animals.

The Dee Catchment Partnership carried out the work to restore the burn to its meandering route, using well-tested techniques for restoring rivers. The new ‘design’ allows for plants to trap more sediment in the burn. This means that any flooding will be in a part of the reserve where it will benefit wildlife and reduce sediment getting into the lochs, without affecting nearby farmers.

Reserve manger Catriona Reid said:“Since last autumn when the works were completed, the burn has started to look a lot more natural. Dead trees, snapped off by the wind, have fallen into the burn and will provide hiding places for young fish, while nearby ‘scrapes’ have filled with water and will provide feeding areas for wading birds and breeding areas for dragonflies The habitat here should continue to improve and benefit wildlife in years to come.”

Drainage has been part of land use in Scotland for centuries. However, the benefits that it brought for forestry and farming down the years were rarely good for wildlife. Quick drainage may also increase the risk of flooding downstream, and the sediment may damage the gravel beds where fish such as salmon need to breed, as well as affecting the water quality of lochs into which the burns run.